chapter 15
The days wore past the
two- and then the three-week mark and a new set of shiny and
clueless American girls now sat around the table. Taylor sat next
to me. Of course she had found her way to Brunei. She had bullied
and cajoled and otherwise hypnotized Ari into sending her a ticket.
Taylor would not be denied. I was wary of her at first, but her ire
had worn thin in the face of all the other competition and we were
fast friends again.
The American and European girls now spilled over
from house five to house six. Most of the Asian girls, with the
exception of Leanne and Fiona, stayed at another location, which
was more like a dorm. Taylor and I shared a room in guesthouse six.
Leanne had the room across the hall and Serena had the master. Ari
took over the master in guesthouse five. The minor characters, the
bit parts, the day players (don’t get too attached; they change
fast) were a blond Amazon volleyball player named Kimmee, an L.A.
rock groupie named Brittany, who wore a promise ring that was
supposedly from Vince Neil, and an anti-Semite named Suzy, who
treated me to my first experience of hearing the word Jew used as a verb, as in, “I Jewed him down on the
price of these earrings.”
The Prince was allowed four wives and he had
only three. So the subtext for all the vindictive vying between the
girls in Brunei was that the prize might be a crown. The game was
this: Transcend all assumptions, transcend all invisible
hierarchies, inspire the love that conquers all and you can turn
from stepdaughter of the world—Thai teenage hooker, aging Playmate,
flailing actress, retail slave, delusional rock slut—to princess.
From duck to swan with a nod of his head.
Some girls came and went, just interchangeable
faces in the joke snapshots we took around the house when we were
drunk and too amped up to get to sleep (snapshots that would
embarrass me later when one of the girls sold hers to E! True Hollywood Story). Some girls stayed for long
periods of time and hung out under the radar as pretty couch
decorations. Some girls got off the bench and really got in the
game with everything they had. All the girls changed during their
time in Brunei. All the girls were transformed in some way by the
pressure, the paranoia, the insidious insecurity that creeps in
when you size yourself up against a roomful of other girls every
night.
Who would you be? Would you shine or would you
buckle? Would you stay and slug it out or would you run?
One of the favorite topics of discussion between
the girls was what we told parents, boyfriends, and husbands. When
a porn star first appears in a movie, hair pinned up and eyeglasses
on, before she crawls onto the office desk, you always wonder, How
did she tell her parents?
Serena said that she told her parents she was
dating her employer. She told the guy she lived with (the red-head
who had dropped her at the airport, who had moved with her to L.A.
from Kansas, not her boyfriend, she
insisted) that she was a nanny. Taylor didn’t have parents as far
as I could tell. She never talked about them and she never made a
call. When we had first met she had told me a bogus story about a
peach plantation, so I never asked again. I thought I’d spare her
the lie.
I had put it off for too long and it was time to
tell my parents something if I didn’t want to cause an
international incident. They were growing audibly suspicious of my
rushed calls from the set of the eternal Singapore movie shoot. I
sat in my kitty-print pj’s by the phone table in the marble
entranceway, picked up the receiver, and dialed their number.
The conversation was awkward, with the painful
pause of the international phone lines serving as a reminder of the
distance between us. I told them that while shooting that mythical
movie in Singapore I had met a man, that I was working as his
assistant, that he was the Prince of Brunei.
“Where?” asked my father.
“Brunei.”
“What the fuck is Brunei?”
I could have made up something less revealing,
something without such an easily breakable code as “assistant.” But
you have to couch your lies in truth or they tighten around you
like a Chinese finger trap.
It was harder than I thought. My parents sounded
confused. They sounded worried and powerless, my father stuttering
with anger and handing over the phone, my mother trying to figure
out what the hell was going on while still staying on everyone’s
good side—ever the diplomat, whatever the cost. I pictured her with
her fingers wrapped around the back of one of the kitchen chairs,
her knuckles white; pictured a pot of tomato sauce bubbling on the
electric burner behind her.
“When are you coming home?”
“I’m not sure. Two weeks. Three. Maybe
longer.”
I felt the noose of guilt tighten. I could taste
the acid at the back of my throat. It made me physically sick, all
the lying. Sorry I’m not a different daughter, I wanted to say.
Sorry you weren’t different parents. Sorry for hurting you. Sorry
for this whole mess. Sorry and I’m doing it anyway. After
everything between us, I still felt the constant compulsion to say
I was sorry.
When I had made my decision to leave home for
good, I had been sixteen. I know it was a Saturday because I’d been
babysitting. I pressed the code on the garage door and entered
through the downstairs. My mother stood over the ironing board
wearing jeans and a BeDazzled sweatshirt. She was backlit by the
bare bulb in the laundry room, her mouth set and her shoulders
squared. The house smelled like steamed cotton. I was thinking
about my reading for school, about Holden Caulfield hiding his
imaginary bullet wound, about April being the cruelest month—big,
important things. I walked right past her.
“You could at least say hello.”
“Hello.” I kept walking. I didn’t have time for
my mother, but my father and I had endless time for each other.
Every day called for a new maneuver in our permanent state of war.
But my mother got passed over. I think she smarted from my
dismissal.
“Look at me.” She demanded some attention. “What
have you been doing?”
“Drunk-driving.”
“Don’t talk to me like that.”
“Like what?”
My father was halfway down the stairs; I could
gauge his heavy footfalls above us. My mother left her ironing and
stood confrontationally in my path. I tried to walk around her, but
she grabbed my wrist.
“Don’t you walk away from me. Look at me. Are
you on drugs?”
This was her favorite question. She was on all
kinds of committees: drug education in the schools, date-rape
awareness, silent auction for the school fair. The drug-education
committee had made her paranoid. The truth was that I wasn’t on
drugs all that often and I definitely wasn’t on drugs that night,
if you didn’t count the fact that I had sucked the nitrous out of
the Cohens’ whipped cream.
“Get off me.” I pulled my arm away.
By this time my father was on the landing of the
staircase. When I yanked my wrist out of my mother’s hand it looked
to him like I was about to hit her.
My father could move at incredible speeds. He
was a short, Humpty Dumpty-shaped guy, but he defied physics with
the momentum of his anger. His eyes were bulging and bloodshot. The
veins along the side of his neck grew unnaturally large and the
visible capillaries along his nose and cheeks darkened with effort
as they struggled to accommodate the rush of blood to his face. He
was so fast that I hardly saw him coming.
“Don’t you ever raise a hand to your
mother.”
His hand clutched my throat and he swept me
backward until I hit the wall.
“Shameful. Fucking disgusting. Ungrateful little
bitch.”
With every punctuation mark my father pulled me
forward by my throat and then slammed my head back again. When he
let go, I crumpled to the floor and pulled my knees to my chest. I
called it my civil-disobedience trick. I closed my eyes and made
myself into the tiniest ball. I showed no soft bits.
“Look at me when I talk to you.”
He paced in front of me, clenching and
unclenching his fists. The hitting was easy compared to the words.
The hitting happened only infrequently but the words happened every
day. I knew he was wrong, knew he was inexcusable. But still, the
words were the worst part. He stammered as they tumbled out of him.
He spoke in tongues, literally foaming at the mouth.
“You’re a pig you dress like a fucking slob and
you make yourself ugly you look like an ugly dyke and you think
you’ll meet nice people that way you won’t you think you’ll meet a
nice boy that way you won’t we are ashamed of you you’re nothing
but a fucking disappointment a waste a fucking waste of a person
what happened what happened to you what did I do to deserve this
this this piece-of-shit life these fucking kids you’re a joke this
is a fucking joke on me.”
I knew my father’s rages and I knew how to stop
them. I knew it would get worse for a minute, but it would be over
soon. I instigated him.
“Is that the best you can do?”
“What did you say to me in my house?”
He grabbed my hair and pulled me away from the
wall.
“Are you on drugs?”
I flicked the off switch. I went limp in all my
limbs and dead in the eyes. He straddled my chest and hit me in the
face repeatedly, alternating his open palm with his nastier
backhand. Every time his hand made contact, he asked me again, “Are
you on drugs?”
My ears rang and the ringing was a thread. I
took the edge of the thread and pulled myself, light as air, to the
top of the room and out into the deep green suburban night with the
cut-grass smell and the crickets, the lights on behind curtains,
the TVs flickering in their living rooms. I sailed past West Orange
and Newark and along the Parkway and over the Hudson and never once
looked down until I saw New York, the Emerald City, its spires
shining in the moonlight. I knew something about New York. I knew I
wouldn’t be ugly when I got there.
My mother stood with her arms at her sides by
the foot of the stairway across the room. She looked like someone
in a movie who had been frozen in time while the other characters
kept moving. The spell lifted just long enough for her to call
out.
“Enough. Please. Enough.”
I wasn’t sure if she was talking to my father or
me or God.
My father stood up and backed off, looking
confused and lost. I imagined I knew what he was thinking right
then: that his life was so very far from anything he had hoped for,
had tried for, had dreamed of when he dreamed of a family. That he
was so very far from the man he’d thought he was. I felt sorry for
him.
“My children are a curse from God,” he said, as
he turned and walked out the door to the garage.
When my father snapped like this, hours later—or
in the worst cases the next day—an entirely different person would
sheepishly knock on my door and ask if I wanted to come downstairs
and listen to music in front of the fire, or if I wanted to go for
ice cream at Baskin-Robbins and rent a movie.
“I have a bad temper,” he likes to say about
himself. “But it’s over fast.” As if a quick beating is preferable
to a big, long talk.
After that night, I told my mother I was leaving
home. My mother—sender of award-worthy care packages to summer
camp, cheerful carpooler, PTA president, tireless volunteer,
meticulous writer of thank-you notes, thrower of flawless dinner
parties, dedicated caretaker of any sick family and friends—thought
it was a good idea. She suggested that I get my GED and apply for
college a year early.
I got into NYU and my mother took me to
Loehmann’s to buy me some new clothes for college. Whenever we went
shopping, my mother was generous to a fault. She often suffered the
consequences later, when the bill came back and my father ranted
about her carelessness, her uselessness. She couldn’t even clean
the house, he said. All she was good for was shopping. These
reckonings happened every time a bill came back, but still she
shopped.
“You have to understand men,” she told me. “You
let them say what they need to say and then you do what you want
anyway.”
My mother wanted to go to Loehmann’s and I
wanted to go to the only punk clothing store in all of North
Jersey, so we compromised. I was terrified by what I had dubbed the
“Hadassah thighs” on the old Jewish ladies in the Loehmann’s
communal dressing rooms and she was appalled by the swastikas
tattooed on either side of the punk store clerk’s Mohawk, but we
were gentle with each other that day.
“She shouldn’t have a haircut like that with
such a fat face,” was all that my mother said about the
clerk.
We had lunch together and I can’t remember what
we talked about. There was a sweetness to the ritual, the final
shopping trip before I left home for good. It was as if I was any
girl leaving home to go to college. And in some ways it was true.
Both realities existed simultaneously. I was a half-broken anorexic
teen hiding behind my purple hair and running for my life and I was
a precocious girl with theatrical aspirations, an early admission
to a good school and a numbered list of dreams and plans that took
up ten pages of my diary.
And both mothers existed simultaneously: My
mother whose eyes went cloudy, who stared into space and stood with
her hands limp at her sides while her husband berated her kids; my
mother who sewed labels onto every last sheet before I left for
college. I could hear both mothers on the other end of the phone
line that day.
“Ask her if she’s still going to come to the
Caymans with us this year,” my dad said in the background.
“Honey, are you going to make it home in time to
come to the Caymans with us? We’d really like it if you’d come,” my
mother translated.
“No, Mom, I don’t think so.”
“What did she say?” my dad asked my
mother.
“No. She said no. She can’t come this
year.”
“What? I’m stuck with just her brother? Tell her
she’s ruining my whole vacation.”
My mother didn’t translate this last comment.
Instead she said, “Are you really all right?”
“I’m great. This is a great job. I can’t pass it
up.”
By the time I hung up, I was relieved that they
knew the sort-of truth and I was also relieved that I didn’t have
to see them for a while. No one was waiting for the phone, so I
called Sean. I called Sean and wept. I missed him. I was homesick.
I turned around and watched myself in the mirror as my face turned
dough-pale and splotchy. I secretly liked watching myself cry. It
was like watching someone else’s face. It proved to me I was
feeling something. Sometimes I spent so much time acting the part
that I forgot how I was really feeling, forgot if I ever even had
any real feelings.
“Then come home, Jill. Just come home,” he said,
sounding tired. Tired of me. Later he told me he wasn’t tired of
me, he was sad for me, for what I was becoming, for his inability
to change my course.
“I can’t.”
“I can’t help you.”
I called Penny and she told me the show was
proceeding without me, but assured me there would always be a place
for me. We’d write in something new when I got back. Except I
didn’t know when I was coming back. I regretted not assuaging my
mother’s worry, not returning to Sean, not being there while Penny
was writing our show, but I was compelled to stay in a way I
couldn’t explain to any of them. I couldn’t just walk away. I
couldn’t leave and let Serena win. I didn’t want to be the
quitter.
At the parties I sparkled with laughter, but back
at the house I was grim and homesick. Serena was relentless. She
sent back the food before I got downstairs in the morning. She
organized mimosa parties out by the pool and forgot to invite me.
She blasted movies in the den, next to my room, when I tried to
nap. She told the other girls that I smelled, that I was a hooker
with herpes, that I was a drunk, that I was a fat, bulimic slob.
Everything she said was overheard by the powers that lurk, that
surveil, so that after the herpes comment I was taken on a surprise
trip to the doctor.
I knew about Serena’s treachery from Taylor, who
kept me in the loop because she hated Serena, too, and because I
was maybe her only friend in Brunei or New York or anywhere, even
though she still tried to charge me commission on the money I made.
Taylor and I lay in bed together and looked up at the lights in the
stepped ceiling. It was kind of like a sunken living room in
reverse.
Taylor whispered in my ear with the music on
loud so no one could overhear us. She tried to get me to take
revenge on Serena.
“You have to retaliate.”
“Nobody listens to me; they listen to
her.”
“Robin listens to you. Why do you think she’s
doing this?”
I was beginning to believe that I somehow
inspired an ancient tribal instinct to cast out the one who was
different.
“It’s not because you’re different, sweet pea,”
said Taylor. “Stop being so married to that whole self-concept.
It’s because you’re better. It’s because he prefers you. But that
bitch may change his mind unless you get in there and defend what’s
yours.”
But I couldn’t remember ever having taken
revenge on anyone. Instead, I would sink deeper into myself; I
would run away. I clung to my dreams of stardom and knew that
therein lay my revenge. Taylor had something much more immediate in
mind, and under her tutelage, I was beginning to consider it. I was
beginning to think I owed it to myself.
After all, isn’t that what you do when you
suddenly find yourself a member of a royal court? You plot. You
scheme. You jockey for position. You take revenge. Isn’t that the
person you want to be? Or do you want to be the girl with the
steadfast, good heart, the girl who gets stepped on, the girl you
inevitably wish had less screen time because everyone else is so
much more interesting?
“You have to stand up for yourself. You could
tell him something about her that would get her sent home,”
suggested Taylor, twirling a lock of my hair absentmindedly around
her finger.
“He’s too smart. He would know what I was
doing.”
“Not necessarily. Not if you’re smart, too.
Smarter. You can be, you know. He has a weakness. He’s blinded by
his ego.”
Taylor’s visit to Brunei ended quickly, much to
my disappointment, putting a stop to our schemes. She was sent home
after three weeks and wasn’t asked back. Taylor and Robin didn’t
gel. Taylor may have been brilliant in her way, but she was too
calculating, didn’t have enough soft spots. She was just like him
and he recognized it immediately. He preferred girls he could
charm, girls he could hurt. Taylor was a good actress, but she had
her limitations. She couldn’t do vulnerable. But she had stayed
long enough to plant a hard, cold seed in me.
The seed that Taylor planted, Fiona watered.
After Taylor left, I would escape to Fiona’s house in the
afternoons to smoke and eat her chocolates. Fiona was the only girl
on the property who got her own house. She slept in the master and
used the other two bedrooms—the entire rooms—as closets. She had
the beds removed and she rolled in wardrobe racks instead. Her
suits and gowns and tennis attire and loungewear and even her
pajamas were arranged first by genre and then by color. She didn’t
do it herself; she delegated with a grandiose sense of
entitlement.
Fiona had twice as many servants in her
guesthouse as we did in ours and they were always running around
doing one task or another. Fiona spoke to them almost exclusively
in Thai and they actually seemed to like her. I was always
apologetic with the servants. I had so much to learn.
Fiona had been a popular television actress in
the Philippines. She told me that Robin had fallen in love with her
while watching her show and had sought her out and invited her for
a visit. Initially she was intrigued, then she was repulsed, then
he won her over. On her first night in Brunei, she had walked into
the party and then walked straight back out. Robin had answered her
consternation with diamonds. She pulled the necklace out of a
drawer crammed with jewelry boxes and tried it on for me. It was in
the shape of a diamond cougar that clasped to its own tail. It
curled around her neck like something captured, declawed. She had
been in Brunei six months already.
We drank tea in Fiona’s living room as she
reclined on the couch and chain-smoked. There was no smoking
allowed anywhere; Robin loathed it. Fiona did it anyway.
I had a good, snotty cry and complained to her.
The other girls were so cruel. Taylor had gone home. I missed New
York. I missed Sean. I had mounting anxiety, had too many
hangovers, woke every morning with a dark cloud over my head I
couldn’t shake.
“I can’t take those mean bitches. I can’t take
this anymore.”
“Stop being stupid. Are you here to make
friends?” she asked. “That’s a mistake. I’m not your friend. Robin
is not your friend. Those morons are certainly not your friends.
The money is your only friend.”
I wanted to be like Fiona. I had considered
myself all grown up when I was about fifteen, but I was changing my
mind.
“Besides, you’ll get back at them. I have my own
ideas about retribution,” she said. “Most of them include
shopping.”
One morning soon after, I received the by-then
familiar knock on my door, but when I got downstairs to the car,
Fiona was sitting in it.
“We’re going shopping,” she said. “Robin likes
to see us in traditional gowns. Don’t worry; we’ll get real clothes
later. Think of this as an appetizer.”
A driver chauffeured us around to traditional
Malay shops, where heavily made-up women in patterned silks fussed
over us, costuming us in brightly colored sarong Kebayas and sarong
Baju Kurongs, complete with matching bejeweled shoes, hair pieces,
and jewelry. We must have bought ten each. The driver shelled out
note after note and toted all of our bags to the car.
That night, Robin had portraits of Fiona and me
taken by the fountain in the entrance hallway of the palace. I
stood there all wrapped up in a traditional gown of beaded pink
silk, with a glittering pink fake flower adorning my hair. Most of
the photos were of each of us individually, but in some of the
poses Fiona and I sat next to each other and held hands like it was
a wedding portrait.
Fiona was becoming more than a friend; she was
an older sister of sorts, in a pervy way. I had always wanted a
sister. That night I felt that my position in the hierarchy of the
harem made me a participant in something ancient. Part of it was
treacherous and terrible, but part of it wasn’t so bad, this world
of women with one enigma of a man who held sway over us all.
Our next shopping trip was something else
entirely.
Fiona and I sat in the back of yet another car,
this time heading back to the Bandar Seri Begawan airport, where we
hopped on a private plane to Singapore. The interior of the plane
was all white leather and gilded hardware and walls that looked
like white marble veined with gold. Chic flight attendants served
us drinks and lunch, fanned out magazines for us to choose
from.
“Thank you, Siti. Thank you, Jing,” she said to
the smiling flight attendants as we exited the plane. Fiona learned
and remembered everyone’s name.
Fiona walked through the airport like she had
somewhere to go, but never like she was in a rush. She always wore
heels and it gave her hips a slight swing—nothing too slutty, but
enough to affect a gravitational pull on the attention of the men
she passed. I mirrored her gait all the way to our waiting car and
then out again when we reached the Hilton, where we were staying in
the Prince’s private suite. The suite occupied an entire floor, had
its own full staff, and was more like a villa than a suite. The
interior was classic Robin, with a big indoor fountain and lots of
solid-gold doorknobs.
Fiona was a class act all the way, whereas I
felt like Courtney Love stumbling around in Buckingham Palace. I
resolved that if I was going to have flight attendants and pilots
and drivers and maids waiting on me, I should at least be worthy of
the part. I started by making a conscious effort not to use the
words fuck and like
in every sentence. Emulating Fiona’s British accent was going too
far, but, barring that, I forced my syllables to fall in step with
her proper diction. I tried to trade whatever Jersey harshness
hadn’t been pounded out of me by years of acting lessons for her
silky contralto.
I watched how she sat with her back like a rod
at dinner and still looked relaxed. I began to keep my fork in my
left hand, cutting small bites of chicken and managing to talk and
still keep my mouth closed while I chewed. I studied Fiona as if
doing an acting exercise. I was definitely playing a role, but it
wasn’t a role that was going to be so easy to step out of. When I
stood on that balcony in Singapore and felt that I was on the brink
of being transformed, I had been right.
We slept over that night and ate a breakfast of
bacon and eggs together in the morning. Fiona ate like a lady, but
she ate every bite. She wasn’t a dieter.
“You’ll learn that Robin never keeps skinny
girls around for long,” she said. “Now tell me, who can resist a
man like that?”
It was true. Who doesn’t like a guy who likes
his girls zaftig? I skipped the bacon but giddily helped myself to
more eggs. It was such a relief.
We talked about our lives at home. She had
already bought herself and her parents townhouses with her earnings
from acting. Then she had given her townhouse to her sister and
bought a second house for herself with her earnings from Robin;
rather, with her “gifts.”
I tried to explain to her what experimental
theater was and I could tell she thought it was the stupidest thing
she had ever heard.
“How artistic,” she said politely.
I could tell that she found me, if not fabulous,
then at least amusing; if not an equal, than at least a worthy
playmate. It dawned on me that I had not climbed the ladder so
quickly because Robin had fallen head over heels, though I believe
he was genuinely growing fond of me. It was because Fiona had
wanted a friend. Fiona was the one who had picked me, guided his
affections.
“I told Robin that you had to come along
shopping with me this time,” she told me, a little reminder of who
was in charge.
After breakfast, we each set off separately with
a driver. I had thought we should go together, but when I told
Fiona this she had shrugged me off, telling me there wouldn’t be
room for both of us in the same store at the same time, which
seemed ridiculous. Next to my driver sat a bodyguard with a Louis
Vuitton sack full of cash, like a parody of a bag that robbers in a
silent movie would use to heist a bank.
The bodyguard asked me where I wanted to go. He
knew the location of all the stores in Singapore; I only needed to
choose. I named the first designer I could think of: Dolce and
Gabbana. Done.
Singapore reminded me of a silver, sci-fi utopia
located under an oxygen dome. Like microcosms of Singapore itself,
the malls were gleaming and modern. The first mall was shiny,
white, and curled upward in a spiral, like the Guggenheim. I
gingerly fingered the clothes at Dolce, staring at the multiple
zeros on the price tags. A salesgirl hovered behind me and yanked
each piece of clothing off the rack as soon as I touched it. When
she had an armful she handed it off to another girl, who ran it to
the dressing room. It was like a bucket brigade.
When I went to try on the clothes, I discovered
that the salesgirls at designer shops in Singapore are slightly
different from those at Urban Outfitters. Three of them piled into
my dressing room and pretty much took my clothes off for me.
I started out slowly, trying on everything
twice, looking at price tags, asking everyone’s opinions. The
salesgirls clucked and pulled at the fabric and nodded approvingly.
I frowned and spun in front of the mirror until my guard got fed up
with me and took me by the shoulders.
He looked at me and said, “This is just your
first shop.”
He picked up one dress off the bench in the
dressing room and then took three others off the hanger, gave them
all to the salesgirl, and spoke to her in Malay. She took them to
the counter.
“Take them all. You may only shop once in your
life.”
He picked a purse out of the spotlight on a
glass shelf and gave it to the next girl, who took it to the front
of the shop.
“But how much can I spend?” I didn’t want to
reach my limit and wind up with a bunch of clothes I didn’t really
love, especially if I might only shop once in my life.
“Just get them and let’s go. I’ll let you know
when you’re close to your limit.”
Chanel, Hermes, Versace, Dior, Armani, Gucci. We
exhausted the first mall and went to the next and yet another until
everything, even the most expensive things—especially the most
expensive things—started to look cheap and nauseating. We never
even took the bags with us; they were sent on ahead. It was
frantic. I was like some suburban mother who wins a holiday raffle
and gets ten free minutes at Toys“R”Us, running through the aisles
with a shopping cart, grabbing everything she can reach.
I was aware of my rabid consumerism. What about
the eight-year-old slaves in China who stitched these ridiculously
priced rags together? What about hungry people? Homeless people?
Entire countries besieged by poverty and famine? Entire blocks of
New York where the sidewalks are lined with encampments of
cardboard?
This is what I told myself: It wasn’t my money
to spend it was Robin’s and he wasn’t spending it on the homeless
he was spending it on clothing for his mistress and if I didn’t buy
that dress right there it wouldn’t help anything it wouldn’t give
one abused garment worker a cubic inch more of fresh air. I was
being silly, entertaining the pretensions of the bourgeois bleeding
heart. Not buy a dress because people were starving? Even the guilt
itself was an embarrassment, kind of like experimental theater.
Fiona would have scoffed. She would have deemed my foolishness
unforgivable. I convinced myself that Robin was probably a really
charitable guy in other ways. After all, everyone had health care
in Brunei; everyone had a good education free of charge. What was
the harm if he wanted his girlfriends to look nice, too?
After the shops closed at nine p.m., security
guards opened the doors for us. Salesgirls stayed late in the
stores and we kept shopping, my arches aching in my sandals as we
power-walked the dim corridors of the closed malls. I started
throwing down Chanel gowns on the counter without even trying them
on. I figured I might as well go until I hit my spending limit, but
I hit a wall of exhaustion first and gave up. We drove back to the
hotel close to midnight. I had been shopping since eleven that
morning.
“What was my limit anyway?” I asked the
bodyguard when we were in the car. I couldn’t believe I hadn’t hit
it. I had certainly tried.
“You didn’t have one. No limit only for some
girls. Only for very special girls.”
“Well, how much did I spend, then?”
He told me a number that left me speechless. The
number far exceeded the down payment on the house I live in today.
I felt drunk.
Fiona and I ate in silence. I was dehydrated and
the noodles seemed gummy and tasteless. We went straight to our
rooms, exhausted. Fifteen identical suitcases lined the wall. My
new clothes were already folded and packed inside them. I lay on
the bed and tried to squeeze my knees so tightly into my chest that
I would wring the disgust out of my gut.